Sowetan

Semenya boosts her bid for a double, secures spot in today’s 800m semifinals

- By David Isaacson in London

Newly crowned world champion Luvo Manyonga will have a crack at the 8.95m long jump world record at a specially arranged jumps meet at high altitude in the French Alps next week.

The competitio­n on Wednesday will be staged at 3 032m above sea level using a temporary sand pit.

“If there’s a chance of Luvo breaking the record, it will be at this meet because of the altitude,” coach Neil Cornelius said at a press briefing in London featuring his charge Manyonga and long jump bronze medallist Ruswahl Samaai.

“It’s going to happen eventually,” added the coach. “We will get a big jump.”

The two world marks before Mike Powell’s record from 1991 were set at altitude, both in Mexico City, in 1967 and 1968.

American triple jump star Christian Taylor will also be in action in Tignes.

Manyonga and Samaai, both products of Paarl, have already returned to full training as they prepare to see out the rest of their season, but they’re also dreaming of taking their parents on holidays.

Manyonga, 26, wants to take his retrenched forklift operator father and domestic worker mother to Mauritius, while Samaai, 25, is thinking of taking his factory worker mom on a sea cruise in local waters.

“I wanted [her] to stop working, I want to work for her,” said Manyonga, owner of the 8.65 national mark. “But my mom doesn’t want to stop working.”

He’s also planning on slaughteri­ng a calf on his return to the Western Cape and visiting the Eastern Cape to give thanks to his ancestors.

Samaai is looking forward to playing golf in the off-season, a sport he played in primary school and only returned to after the Rio Olympics last year.

Both admitted to being surprised by the people who had congratula­ted them.

Both believed that South Africa’s long jump explosion started with now 32-yearold Khotso Mokoena, who won Olympic silver in 2008 as well as ending runner-up at the world championsh­ips the following year.

Meanwhile, Caster Semenya won her first-round heat in 2:01.34 last night, qualifying for today’s 800m semis.

Gena Lofstrand also sneaked through to the semis in a time of 2:01.73.

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